Zlotnick Cheryl, Zerger Suzanne
Children's Hospital & Research Center Oakland, Center for the Vulnerable Child, Oakland, CA 94609-1809, USA.
Health Soc Care Community. 2009 Feb;17(1):18-26. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2008.00793.x. Epub 2008 Jun 17.
For almost two decades, the US Health Care for the Homeless (HCH) Program has funded clinics across the country for homeless populations. Between October and December 2003, for the first time ever, a nationally representative sample of the almost 200 HCH clinics with a response rate of approximately 71% (the HCH User Visit Survey) was created to examine the health status of its users (n = 1017). This study employed the HCH User Visit Survey's cross-sectional data set to evaluate health indicators of individuals using HCH Services with the US population, and compare individuals who reported they routinely used HCH clinics ('usual' HCH users) to those who did not ('non-usual' users). HCH users had poorer health status than the US population (44.0% versus 12.3%, respectively). Usual HCH users had similar healthcare status compared to non-usual users, but were more likely to be uninsured, non-English speakers, and walking or taking public transportation to their medical appointments. Usual versus non-usual HCH users were also more apt to have slept in cars, buses or on the streets in the week prior to the survey (14.8% versus 4.3%, respectively). This study shows that the HCH clinics are serving homeless individuals who have a variety of complex health and psychosocial needs, and its most frequent users are those who experience the most barriers accessing care.
近二十年来,美国无家可归者医疗保健(HCH)项目一直在为全国各地面向无家可归人群的诊所提供资金。2003年10月至12月期间,有史以来第一次创建了一个具有全国代表性的样本,涵盖近200家HCH诊所,回复率约为71%(HCH用户就诊调查),以调查其用户(n = 1017)的健康状况。本研究利用HCH用户就诊调查的横断面数据集,将使用HCH服务的个人的健康指标与美国人口进行评估,并将报告经常使用HCH诊所的个人(“常规”HCH用户)与不经常使用的个人(“非常规”用户)进行比较。HCH用户的健康状况比美国人口差(分别为44.0%和12.3%)。与非常规用户相比,常规HCH用户的医疗保健状况相似,但更有可能未参保、不会说英语,并且步行或乘坐公共交通工具去看医生。在调查前一周,常规与非常规HCH用户也更有可能睡在汽车、公交车上或街头(分别为14.8%和4.3%)。这项研究表明,HCH诊所服务的是有各种复杂健康和心理社会需求的无家可归者,其最频繁的用户是那些在获得医疗服务方面面临最多障碍的人。